Hi Lawman1965 and welcome.
Not read through this whole thread yet ...
Lawman1965 wrote:
cameras does help in reduce accidents. Again, I can name at least one junction near my home (and on my patch) that has had the speed reduced by 20mph and cameras installed - I used to go to an accident almost every shift at that junction, since the speed reduction and the cameras I have been to one in 2 years.
Unfortunately - the opposite appears to be happening in LanCASH£re ... their figures have increased and speed is not the problem in Blackpool anyway ... according to a colleague and pal in A&E over there - all incoming wounded were bladdered and walked into anything on wheels - cars, trams, bikes.....

Lancs is a particularly good exampel: more scams there than anywhere else - and they also have a good and laudable initiative - Speed Course for one minor blip in three year period. There was one big problem: they set an absolute zero tolerance and people were being invited for silly overspeeds such as 33/34mph!

In other words - the wrong target. After a lot of protest - my wife and one of her cousins joined an "army" of local folk in keeping up a weekly cat fight with them

Result? The Lancs prats did have the guts to revise their policy a little - and "in repsonse to public concerns" they extended the range across all speed limits and increased the invite cut off to 10% plus 4 - and 10% plus 2 would receive a warning letter.
Lawman1965 wrote:
I hate to deal with accidents and I hate to be the one that has to tell some poor person that their loved one is dead or critical in Hospital.
I am sure you do. I had the unpleasant experience myself once. The police officer who came to tell me that my wife had been involved in a serious accident was a rock at the time. (It was not her fault - victim of a driver who was taken fatally ill behind the wheel of his car and his foot felll on the accelerator. She survived an 80mph hit - just! - and she is still around ... posts on the PH site and sharpens her claws on BiBs

) She was stationary in a queue of traffic at the time - in front of a police car on the hard shoulder. He was also extremely efficient at getting the emergency services to her and he actually managed to keep her fairly comfortable until help arrived. One of the reasons why we want trafpols and not scameras!
My own job involves me giving bad news on an hourly basis. Have one patient whose relatives want someone to die so that he can receive their heart and lungs (virus attacked the heart muscle - his only chance is a transplant...)
Lawman1965 wrote:
I know we cannot all be good drivers but sticking to the lawful limits helps - imagine the two cars crashing at 30mph head on (60mph impact) then think of those if they were doing 40 or 50 in the 30..........I know that in a 60 you could have a 120mph impact, but some roads have been deemed safe for the 60mph speed limit (by who I don't know because there are many roads I'd reduce the limit on - country lanes for example). I know first hand that accidents can happen at any speed but the higher the speed the higher the risk of death and personal injury.
I would want country lanes to be part of the driving test in any case. But the emphasis should be on constant training and encouraging people to understand that the real learning curve begins the day the examiner tells you he is pleased to say "you passed!" A bit like medical studies really ... qualifying is just the first hurdle...you have to keep up with developments and new treatments continuously.
Lawman1965 wrote:
There are many other variables to take into account - I saw one post on this topic where the poster stated that why should he not be able to drive at 100mph in good conditions on a straight dual carriageway in light traffic? I can give one very easy answer and one I am very aware of when I drive on fast response runs - what happens if something OUT of my control occurrs? Such as a tyre blowing or an object (bird, stone anything) strikes the car I'm driving - I might loose control and crash into the central reservation. Even if your side is clear you could pass straight through the barrier and into the path of another. At 100mph the barrier will not stop you, it's not designed to, at 70 you stand a chance of not passing through. You ain't gonna be feeling to well but the people on the other carriageway might still be alive and intact and doing first aid on you rather than bleeding to death.
P>O>W>E>R! Always make sure my wheels are OK before any intended m/way blast. And we lost one member of this family when an artic smashed through a central reserve. Our guy died on the spot. Impact speed was 20 mph. Depends what hits you and where as well.
Freak occurrence - how often do they happen?
Lawman1965 wrote:
I'm going to end this little rant with this - the speed limits are part of the law of this land and if you knowingly break that law you can expect to be prosecuted. If you are willing to do that in your car you can expect the police, the councils and the government to fight back as hard as they fight against drugs or violence and with the most practical and cost effective means - Cameras. If you get caught, don't moan, you shouldn't have been speeding anyway.
In Lancs - they were prosecuting at 34mph last year. Not heard of anyone getting NiPped at this since the revised policy was published....but the scams are set at the point where a vehicle will pick up speed. This may be so gradual that the driver may not "feel" it either.
Gradients, cambers, crowns of roads, surface... they all have an effect as well.
And as for the fight against other crimes.....only conviction rate which is increasing is that of speeding.....Do not hear of many burglars getting copped at all...all too frequently people are just issued with a crime number over the telephone for insurance purposes.... and no officer is despatched to look for evidence at the scene of the crime which may lead to the criminal's capture....
